This essay explores a series of issues which have emerged around the term ‘visualisation’ as a result of materials generated out of the international Lord of the Rings audience project.‘Visualisation’ is quite widely used as a term in film studies, but (apart from some quite precise meanings in production) not much considered. In this essay I begin from some elements of empirical evidence, and through some unlikely encounters that these spurred with bodies of work from outside film studies, I develop an argument for a new approach to thinking about ‘visualisation’. This approach would reach a long way and have wide implications, not least for the ways we think about and research film audiences, and for the ways we approach adaptation studie...
Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy is a familiar blockbuster franchise, adapting a well-known piece of l...
Audiences for blockbuster event-film sequels and adaptations often formulate highly developed expect...
The article examines the relationship between the culture (film) and tourist industries, suggesting ...
This essay explores a series of issues which have emerged around the term ‘visualisation’ as a resul...
international Lord of the Rings project, around the meanings and implications for audiences of choos...
Audience research, after a promising period during which some crucial advances were made, seems to b...
In an increasingly global market, the Hollywood film industry is evolving rapidly. Once a stand-alon...
How did audiences across the world respond to the films of The Lord of the Rings? The book presents ...
The concept of „identification ‟ remains a commonly called-upon resource for considering how media a...
Following the release in 2001 of the first film of Peter Jackson's adapted trilogy of J.R.R. Tolkien...
The concept of ‘identification’ remains a commonly called-upon resource for considering how media au...
none1noWhile Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings (LOTR) trilogy has been the subject of an enormou...
`Audience research, after a promising period during which some crucial advances were made, seems to ...
How did audiences across the world respond to the films of The Lord of the Rings? This book presents...
This thesis examines how the differences between Tolkien's novel - the Lord of the Rings - and its f...
Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy is a familiar blockbuster franchise, adapting a well-known piece of l...
Audiences for blockbuster event-film sequels and adaptations often formulate highly developed expect...
The article examines the relationship between the culture (film) and tourist industries, suggesting ...
This essay explores a series of issues which have emerged around the term ‘visualisation’ as a resul...
international Lord of the Rings project, around the meanings and implications for audiences of choos...
Audience research, after a promising period during which some crucial advances were made, seems to b...
In an increasingly global market, the Hollywood film industry is evolving rapidly. Once a stand-alon...
How did audiences across the world respond to the films of The Lord of the Rings? The book presents ...
The concept of „identification ‟ remains a commonly called-upon resource for considering how media a...
Following the release in 2001 of the first film of Peter Jackson's adapted trilogy of J.R.R. Tolkien...
The concept of ‘identification’ remains a commonly called-upon resource for considering how media au...
none1noWhile Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings (LOTR) trilogy has been the subject of an enormou...
`Audience research, after a promising period during which some crucial advances were made, seems to ...
How did audiences across the world respond to the films of The Lord of the Rings? This book presents...
This thesis examines how the differences between Tolkien's novel - the Lord of the Rings - and its f...
Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy is a familiar blockbuster franchise, adapting a well-known piece of l...
Audiences for blockbuster event-film sequels and adaptations often formulate highly developed expect...
The article examines the relationship between the culture (film) and tourist industries, suggesting ...